dozer
Structural
- Apr 9, 2001
- 502
We've got an extremely heavy object riding on several cam followers. The cam followers ride on an 2" thick plate embedded in concrete. Here's the problem. Who ever "designed" (I use the term loosely) the embed plate didn't think about hardness. They just used A36 steel.
You guessed it, the embed plates have long since been installed, so I'm planning on bolting a hardened plate on top of the embed plate. Maybe Ryerson's Wearform 400 which has a hardness of 360 BHN.
Is there a way to calculate how thick this extra plate needs to be or can I just go with a 1/4" and call it good? The plate would be completely supported by the embed plate which is in a 3' thick reinforced concrete floor. The cam followers are 5" O.D. and have a load of about 29,000 lbs each. They move very slowly (9 in/min) and not very far or very often.
You guessed it, the embed plates have long since been installed, so I'm planning on bolting a hardened plate on top of the embed plate. Maybe Ryerson's Wearform 400 which has a hardness of 360 BHN.
Is there a way to calculate how thick this extra plate needs to be or can I just go with a 1/4" and call it good? The plate would be completely supported by the embed plate which is in a 3' thick reinforced concrete floor. The cam followers are 5" O.D. and have a load of about 29,000 lbs each. They move very slowly (9 in/min) and not very far or very often.